Blog dedicated to reporting on Mexican drug cartels
on the border line between the US and Mexico
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Showing posts with label durango. Show all posts
Showing posts with label durango. Show all posts

Friday, April 18, 2025

La Chapiza Cartel Sends Brutal Message In Good Friday To Los Cabrera/MF In El Rosario , Sinaloa, Two Bodies Dismembered And Narco Banner Found.

 "Char" 

April 18, 2025 


The Sinaloa Civil War between La Mayiza/MF and Los Chapitos/La Chapiza continues, and a peace treaty at the moment does not seem possible. 

The morning of this Good Friday, April 18, 2025, various reputable Sinaloa news sites, including "NOROESTE," reported the finding of two dismembered bodies, a man and a woman along with a narco banner found in El Rosario, Sinaloa, which is about forty-five miles away from the port of Mazatlan, Sinaloa. 

The narco banner found next to the dismembered bodies made threats against the Los Cabrera and MF criminal groups. 


WARNING: GRAPHIC IMAGE AND VIDEO!


BANNER TRANSLATION

THAT IS WHAT WILL HAPPEN TO ANYONE WHO IS SUPPORTING AND STILL BELIEVES THAT SINALOA IS CONTROLLED BY LOS MAYOS, COME FOR YOUR TRASH, CABRERA, AND MF


 

Sunday, December 22, 2024

La Chapiza Feels The Pressure From The La Mayiza Or MF Group Offensive Attacks In Southern Sinaloa And Forcibly Recruits New Hitmen From Drug Rehabilitation Centers

 "Char" for Borderland Beat 

DECEMBER 21, 2O24



In the following, interrogation video La Mayiza captured two alleged hitmen recruited by La Chapiza Cartel from a drug rehabilitation center in Mazatlan, Sinaloa. La Mayiza or MF Group, with help from the Los Cabrera Sarabia brothers' criminal organization armed wing Los Flechas, are constantly pressuring plazas in the southern areas of Sinaloa, Concordia, Villa Union, and Mazatlan. 

Cartels are known to prey on the most vulnerable (teenagers, drug rehabilitation centers) through their famous recruitment tactics, whether it is deceitful job offers like CJNG Cartel has been known to do or in this instance, La Chapiza's forcible recruitment to replenish membership as their troops appeared to have suffered casualties from the onslaught of attack from the MF Group or La Mayiza. 






VIDEO TRANSLATION
BY: SOL PRENDIDO 



Sicario: What’s your name?


Captive #1: Jonathan Daniel Villa Silva.


Sicario: What’s your alias?


Captive #1: Chino. 


Sicario: Which rehabilitation center were you taken out of?


Captive #1: The 'Volviendo al Original' center. 


Sicario: Where is this place located?


Captive #1: In the Villa Verde neighborhood. 




Sicario: How many other individuals were taken out with you?


Captive #1: Three other persons. 


Sicario. What are their aliases?


Captive #1: Robert, El Vallarta, and El Edwin. 


Sicario: What’s the name of that center?


Captive #1:  Carlos Pelos. 


Sicario: What vehicle did they pick up in?


Captive #1:  A white van. 


Sicario: How many occupants were inside?


Captive #1: Two in the rear and two in the front. 


Sicario: What were their names?


Captive #1: One individual was known as 70. 


Sicario: What’s your name?


Captive 2: Rafael PatrĂłn Mancilla. 


Sicario: What’s your alias?


Captive #2: El Ranfle. 


Sicario: Which rehabilitation center were you taken out of?


Captive #2: The 'Pertenecer Mazatlán' center. 


Sicario: Where is this place located?


Captive #2: In the Urias neighborhood of Mazatlán. 





Sicario: How many others were taken out of there?


Captive #2: About eight individuals. 


Sicario: What were their aliases?


Captive #2: Hilariio, Garobo, Peque, El Escobe, El Topo, El Shorty, and Jefi. 


Sicario: What vehicle did they come to pick you up in?


Captive #2: A white van. 


Sicario: How many guys were there?


Captive #2: Two. 


Sicario: What were their names?


Captive #2: One individual was known as 70. 


Sicario: What does El 70 look like?


Captive #2: He’s light-skinned, chubby, and has long hair. 


Sicario: Where are you taken afterward?


Captive #2:  To a two-story white house in the town of El Verde. 




Sicario: How many dually trucks arrived?


Captive #2: Two trucks. From there we were taken to the town of San Marcos where four other individuals were picked up. The house is next to the La Liconsa store. And from there we were taken to the town of GuamĂşchil to a house that they said belonged to the Los Zatarain clan. After that we were sent on foot to go fight. 




Video ends with the following message: If these are your relatives, report the culprits. So that they can be rescued alive, they were kidnapped by Victor Manuel Barraza Pablos, aka El 40. 

 








Sunday, April 13, 2014

10 die in Durango state

A total of 10 individuals, eight of whom were from the same family were found dead or were killed in armed confrontations in Durango  state since Saturday, according to Mexican news accounts.

In a news report which appeared in El Diario de Coahuila news daily, eight siblings were found shot to death in Pueblo Nuevo municipality Saturday.

According to the report the dead were from the Duran Chamorro family and were found in the village of Balontita, which is near the border with Santa Rosario municipality in Sinaloa state.  A few of the dead were identified unofficially as Eusiquia, Bernardo, Erika, "Chuya", Cruz, Cecilia, Hermelinda and Samuel.

Also in Pueblo Nuevo, although the news report failed to state when, an individual identified as  Fidel Ortega, 44, was shot to death in the village of Los Naranjos.

A Mexican Army road patrol engaged and killed one armed suspect near the village of La Puerta in Pueblo Nuevo.  Another man, identified as  Lamberto Sarabia Cabrera, 20, was wounded in the encounter.

The 10 dead in Pueblo Nuevo municipality is the worse death toll since 2012, when a total of six armed suspects were killed in an intergang shootout in 2012.  A total of nine individuals were killed in that municipality in 2012.

Pueblo Nuevo sits astride Mexico Federal Highway 40, which links the Pacific seaport of Mazatlan to Durango city and points east.

This region of Durango is also part of the Golden Triangle in the western Mexican sierras, where drugs are grown and processed by most of Mexico's drug cartels.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com and BorderlandBeat.com. He can be reached at grurkka@gmail.com

Monday, March 10, 2014

Durango state FGE says 10 lawyers are missing

By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

Durango state Fiscalia General del Estado (FGE) or attorney general Sonia Yadira de la Garza Fragoso told the press Monday that the number of lawyers missing in Durango was 10 not 100 to 120, according to news reports.

A news report which appeared in Milenio news daily said that  de la Garza Fragoso admitted to the press that 120 incidents or reports have been received concerning missing lawyers, some of them are minor incidents such as accident investigations, and that the number of actual cases of missing lawyers is 10.

Fiscalia de la Garza Fragoso's denied a report by Durango state Barra de Abogados or bar association president Martha Alicia Gurrola of the number of missing lawyers was as many as 120.

According to a separate news account in Milenio, Señora Alicia Gurrola said that them number of dead or missing was rumored to be as many as 120, but also said that the numbers she had were unclear.

Many of the 10 missing are those who went missing over the previous four years well  before de la Garza Fragoso's term which began in mid 2011.  Her term began as the mass graves in Durango, most of them in Durango city began to be uncovered.  The final toll of the exhumations was 330.  Many of those dead were in other places in Durango state as well as far away at the Durango side of La Laguna, and some of the dead were reported missing as far back as 2007, when Felipe Calderon began his war on the drug cartels..

The news report said that most of the 10 missing lawyers could be amongst the 330 found in Durango in 2011-2012.

Señora Alicia Gurrola lamented in a third Milenio article which was published last Saturday that  de la Garza Fragoso had not met with the  Barra de Abogados in six months to provide help in security.

The most famous case of a lawyer disappearing in Durango took place in late 29011, when  de la Garza Fragoso's predecessor, Ramiro Ortiz Aguirre was kidnapped and murders in Durango city in March of 2012.  At a presentation with the Durango state Chamber of Deputies at the time,  de la Garza Fragoso admitted pulling state paid Ortiz Aguirre's security detail only hours before the murder.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com and BorderlandBeat.com. He can be reached at grurkka@gmail.com

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

La Laguna ranked 4th in homicides as 4 more die

By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

Despite  the seemingly good news a few days ago of a dramatic drop in homicides from the Coahuila Procuraduria General de Justicia del Estado (PGJE), in the first two months of 2014, according to a group in Mexico the La Laguna region registered the fourth highest murders in Mexico nationwide in 2013, according to Mexican news accounts.

According to a news dispatch posted on the online edition of El Diario de Coahuila news daily, the group El Observatorio Nacional Ciudadano de Seguridad, Justicia y Legalidad (CCI)  said that murder rates have dropped from 2012 to 2013, 35.9% in the Durango side and in La Laguna Metropolitan Area fell 42.4%.

Despite the drop in homicides, according to the group, murder rates have risen seven percent in 2013 in all of Coahuila state when compared with 2012. 

Marco Zamarripa, director of the La Laguna Consejo Civico de las Instituciones (CCI-Laguna), was quoted in the report saying there is a large information gap in gaining crime statistics in the region.  The CCI-Laguna says on their Facebook page they are a non-government organization. 

Marco Zamarripa may have been referring to the Coahuila PGJE report last week, which has been no help as in the past that office has cooked statistics to make crime statistics appear more moderate.

La Laguna is a metropolitan area consisting of several municipalities from eastern Durango state and western Coahuila state.  Police operations even with federal support have failed in the region because of jurisdictional problems between the two states and among the several municipalities which compose La Laguna.  The three largest municipalities in the region include Torreon, Coahuila and Lerdo and Gomez Palacio, both of Durango.

Four individuals were killed in the La Laguna region since last Saturday according to Mexican news reports.

Three victims were found aboard a Ford Explorer midnight Saturday by local police in Lerdo municipality, according to a news report which appeared in El Siglo de Durango news daily.

The victims were two men and a female, one of the men of which was identified as Ricardo Marquez Rivera, 25.  They were found in ejido El Huarache on Avenida San Carlos in Benito Juárez colony. The location where the dead were found was near the Coahuila-Durango border.

Meanwhile in Gomez Palacio, Durango a bus driver was shot and later died Sunday, according to a separate news account which appeared in El Siglo de Durango.

The victim was identified as  Gregorio Lopez Mireles, 56, who was driving a bus between Gomez Palacio and Tlahualilo, near ejido  Arturo Martinez Adame.  An armed suspect shot the victim in an apparent robbery attempt.

According to data supplied by El Siglo de Durango, a total of 22 individuals have been murdered since the start of the year in the Durango side of La Laguna, including the three found in ejido El Huarache, but apparently not including the bus driver killed last Sunday.

In January, nine men died, while in February eight men and two women were reportedly killed in the region.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com and Borderlandbeat.com he can be reached at grurkka@gmail.com

Monday, September 23, 2013

Mexican 10th Military Zone gets new commander

Gen. Martinez Castuera
By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

General de Brigada Sergio Alberto Martinez Castuera has been appointed the newest commander of the Mexican 10th Military Zone, according to Mexican news reports.

The 10th Military Zone encompasses most of Durango state all the way to the sierras, and has been involved in a number of small counternarcotics operations earlier in the spring.

General Martinez Castuera gained his second star in November, 2010, and he served a commandant of the Mexican Army's prestigious military academy, Heroica Colegio Militar between 2011 and 2012.

During that time, charges had surfaced of harassment of cadets, evidenced by an open letter by a woman identified as  Pacheco Gabriela Matias.  It is unclear in the letter if the harassment was to females only, or to all cadets, but the charges included theft and abuse.  No details of any charges were listed in the letter which had been published in a number of Mexican newspapers and magazines.

Whatever became of the charges is also unclear in subsequent news reports, but whatever become of the charges it doesn't seem to have affected the general.

General Martinez Castuera also previously served as commander of the 11th Military Zone in Zacatecas.

What is most interesting about General Martinez Castuera's appointment is that he had served as commander of Mexico's Cuerpo de Fuerzas Especiales or Corp of Special Forces in 2008 and 2009, and implemented the initial training program for Mexican Fuerzas Especiales in counternarcotics operations.

How this comports to his appointment to the 10th Militarty Zone is that last spring the Secretaria de Defensa Nacional (SEDENA) General Salvador Cienfuegos Zepeda told local news reporters in Durango that finding Joaquin Loera Guzman, AKA El Chapo, the leader of Mexico's largest drug cartel, is a "priority", as he put it.

It long has been rumored that Loera maintains a residence somewhere in the sierras of Durango.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com and BorderlandBeat.com. He can be reached at grurkka@gmail.com. His latest work of non-fiction, The Wounded Eagle: Volume 2 went on sale September 1st at Amazon.com and Smashwords.com.

Sunday, August 4, 2013

3 die in sierras of Durango

A total of three unidentified individuals have been killed in an armed confrontation in the mountains of western Durango, according to several Mexican news reports.

According to data supplied in a news account which appeared in the online edition of El Siglo de Durango, the shootout took place in Otaez municipality Saturday.

According to the account, a road patrol detachment of the Mexican 10th Military Zone encountered a group of armed suspects at a location between the villages of Macho Bayo and Huajupa, and attempted to stop them.  Instead the unit was fired on, forcing return fire by soldiers.

Two armed suspects were killed.  They were identified as Jesus Andres Nuñez Sarabia, 26, and Juan Francisco Núñez Ortiz, 18. Presumably more suspects were at the scene but escaped.

The soldier who was killed in the encounter was not identified in any of the news accounts.   It is said he was 28 years old.

Separately, according to statistics compiled by editorial personnel of El Siglo de Durango, to date 21 security personnel from local, state and federal agencies have died since January.  A total of 16 were murdered with the rest involved in accidents.  The total killed in all of 2012 was 54 of which nine were accidents.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com and BorderlandBeat.com He can be reached at grurkka@gmail.com

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Death in Durango: 2 die in San Dimas



Two men were found shot to death in San Dimas municipality Tuesday, according to Mexican news reports.

According to a news report posted on the website of Milenio news daily, a Mexican Army road patrol found the victims near the village of Minitas.

They were identified as Mateo Perez Guzman, 25, and Israel Niebla Perez, 28, both of Tayoltita in San Dimas.  The victims had been shot about the torso and left aboard a Jeep Cherokee SUV.

San Dimas municipality has been the focus of some drug related violence in recent years.  Government workers have suffered threats and vandalism at the hands of local criminal gangs just this past spring.  Several executions and deaths in gunfights have also been reported by Mexican press in San Dimas since 2010.

Meanwhile in Durango city, Durango state police seized 160 kilograms of marijuana in a raid Tuesday.

According to a news report which appeared on the online edition of El Siglo de Durango operatives with the Durango Direccion Estatal de Investigacion (DEI) served an order or apprehension at a residence on calle Canoas in Zona Centro.

Detained at the scene was Gustavo Hernandez Nava, 53.  It is unclear in the report if Hernandez Nava was the object of the detention order.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political new for Rantburg.com and Borderlandbeat.com

Friday, April 26, 2013

3 die in Sierras de Durango

By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

A total of  three individuals were found dead in or near the sierras of western Durango since Wednesday, according to Mexican news accounts.

According to a news report posted on the website of El Siglo de Durango news daily, an unidentified man was found dead in Santiago Papasquiaro shot in the head.  The victim was found on a road leading to the village of Canelas.

Near the village of Tayoltita, municipality of San Dimas municipality, Maria de los Angeles Valdez Villanueva, 62, was shot to death Thursday.  The press account said the victim was shot in the chest by an unidentified male suspect who fled the scene.  El Sol de Durango news daily, however said that Valdez Villanueva was shot in the head.

A Mexican Army counternarcotics operation was concluded just two months ago last February in Tayoltita in San Dimas municipality where soldier seized two AK-47 rifles, three 5.7mm pistols, two 9mm pistols, one 40mm grenade launching attachment, one 40mm grenade, 333 rounds of ammunition and 14 weapons magazines.  The seizure included operations in La Lajita in Tamazula as well.

Violence and threats of kidnappings have been plaguing government workers as well in San Dimas, according to a separate account in El Siglo de Durango.

According to the report, Eduardo Matuk Sariñana -- an administrator with the federal Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social (IMSS) -- said his charges have been subject to intimidation including threats of kidnapping by local drug gangs.

Two weeks ago an IMSS ambulance was fired on and heavily damaged by armed suspects in the village of Vencedores in San Dimas municipality.

In El Salto in Pueblo Nuevo last February, another IMSS clinic was surrounded by local armed drug gang members after one of their members died in the clinic while receiving medical attention.  Threats forced one local doctor to flee the village.

Meanwhile, a third victim was found immolated on Rancho La Joya near the village of San Francisco de Lajas in Mezquita municipality.  The victim was tentatively identified in the El Sol de Durango report as Paula de la Cruz.  The case is being treated by Durango state police investigators as a homicide.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com and BorderlandBeat.com

Saturday, March 9, 2013

New commander takes command of Mexican 10th Military Zone

By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

A press release by the new commander of the Mexican 10th Military zone, published in the online edition of yancuic.com, said that people near the La Laguna region can expect military checkpoints in the region.
General Lissum Foullon

Thursday, General de Brigada Georges Andre Van Lissum Foullon took command of the  10th Military Zone which headquarters are located in Durango city.  The new appointment replaces General de Brigada  Jose de Jesus Hernandez Rivera, who was appointed commander of Operativo Laguna, the new security operation began late last month.

In terms of the type of commander the newly inaugurated president Enrique Pena Nieto wants as he prepares to stand his military down from security duties in Mexico's drug war, General Lissum Foullon is as good as it gets.

According to Mexican news sources, General Lissum Foullon was born in Mexico City on May 15, 1956, and joined the Mexican Army September 1st, 1971.  He formerly held command of the Mexican 2nd Motorized Cavalry Regiment in Nuevo Laredo in Tamaulipas.  Among his other duties during that time he had conducted a weapons buyback program in the city that year.

General Lissum Foullon was promoted to General de Brigada in November 2010, and was appointed command of the Mexican 4th Military Zone based in Hermosillo, Sonora in 2011.

General Lisson Fullon was also military attache in Spain, a prerequisite for top military commands in the Mexican Army.

The general held command during the Tubutama, Sonora gunfight which killed 24 gang members in July of 2010.  Two months after the end of that bloody dual, he commented the local gang activity in his zone of operations was unlike other areas in Mexico. He commented that, "...security systems, the state and municipalities, have been working properly and that's one of the parameters that we can see."  The report began by saying southern Sonora state was one of the safest in Mexico.

During his tenure as commander of the 4th Military Zone he appeared to be the go-to guy for local news about the military, never at a loss to tout the activities and achievements of his command. 

Mindful of the civilian component of his duties the General was also quoted in a Sonora state newspaper as saying that education was the key to fighting drug trafficking, saying the rural areas are vulnerable, but adding that federal and state support for those area have improved.

But for the gun battles in Tubutama, the area of operation of the 4th Military Zone is basically a backwater.  His new command encompasses most of Durango state including the capital city of Durango as well as the Durango side of La Laguna, currently a hard case for security and one of the most violent regions in Mexico.

His holding command of the 4th Military Zone  two years, apparently his first Military Zone command since making General de Brigada, speaks well of his command since Mexican Army general staff do not appear to like trouble and prefers to keep good commanders in place to train troops.

General Lissum Foullon will have his work cut out for him as the Operativo Laguna security program gets into place.  At the moment, Mexican press is reporting that Mexican Army units will continue to cross attach with local and state police units to improve control and cross training in La Laguna.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Mexican Army detains 21 suspected kidnappers in Durango

By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

Mexican Army units and Durango state police agents detained 21 suspected members of a kidnapping crew in the La Laguna region of Mexico, according to Mexican news accounts.

A news report which appeared on the website of Expreso news daily said that Durango state Fiscalia General del Estado (FGE) Sonia Yadira de la Garza Fragoso held a press conference announcing the arrests.

Fiscalia Yadira de la Garza Fragoso

According to Fiscalia Garza Fragoso, the 21 suspects had operated throughout the La Laguna region including in Gomez Palacio, Ciudad Lerdo in Durango, and in Torreon in Coahuila.  The crew was allegedly responsible for attacks on the businesses and home of Gomez Palacio mayor Rocio Rebollo. 

The crew is also suspected for the kidnapping of two employees of El Siglo de Torreon newspaper, and for the murder of Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) candidate for mayor of Ciudad Lerdo, Mario Alberto Landeros Campero and his driver Cesar Almilkar Valenzuela Morales, both found dead Wednesday in Ciudad Lerdo.

Durango is currently involved in primary elections for state deputies and municipal elections to be held July 7th.

Perhaps more importantly, the crew is allegedly responsible for the murder of six traffic police agents in Gomez Palacio last week.

The detainees were identified as Julio Cesar Najera Rosales, 24, Luis Fernando Martinez, 30, Alonso Ivan Ormero, Federico Aguilar Chaidez, Ruben Hernandez, Julian Valles, Hector Gomez, Uriel Reyes, Sergio Resendiz, Jaime Ramirez, Luis Resendiz and Fernando Martinez.

Separately,  Saul Garcia, Sergio Garcia, Ramiro Hernandez, Miriam Aguilar, Hilda Mejia, Dora Luz Rodriguez, Miriam Muñoz and two unidentified minors were also detained.

The arrests also including the taking of six rifles, three machines guns, seven handguns, five bulletproof vests, telephone equipment, four vehicles and personal quantities of marijuana and crystal methamphetamine.

The detentions are the first major mass arrests since 700 Mexican Army troops were moved into La Laguna last week.  Last week an additional contingent of Policia Federal troops had also been deployed to the area.

The arrests come on the heels of another announcement by Fiscalia Garza Fragoso Tuesday which was reported on the online edition of El Siglo de Durango Wednesday, who told local press that more progress was taking place in security operations in the region.

Senora Garza Fragoso also said during the press conference that she was unaware the reasons why a Policia Federal troop contingent had been deployed to Durango city.  This admission means that neither her office nor apparently the governor, Jorge Herrera Caldera had been consulted by federal officials about the new deployment. 

The new Policia Federal deployment is in contrast with the past in which federal security officials have made a point of meeting with state and local officials to detail their security plans.  But it is also a likely break with past practices in which state officials are to take greater responsibility for their own security strategies, that federal officials will be keeping their plans secret whenever they can.

Separately, the newly installed  Durango state Secretaria de Seguridad Publica  Roberto Flores Mier said Tuesday that police who fail the new confidence test would be given a second chance to take and pass the tests.

According to the report 4,232 local and state police agents statewide had taken confidence tests.  According to a report by the outgoing SSP, Jesus Antonio Rosso Olguin, on February 21st, roughly ten percent of the agents had failed the tests.   Rosso Olguin was sacked the next day.
Jesus Antonio Rosso Olguin

The timing of Rosso Olguin's report is interesting, although his departure was timed just one day after six La Laguna police agents were killed in a single evening in Gomez Palacio.  Durango state officials have not elaborated the reasons why Rosso Olguin left.

At least one Durango politician has disputed that police agents who failed tests will be given a second change.

Durango city mayor Adam Ramirez Soria was quoted in a El Siglo de Durango story Thursday that while the national average for police who failed tests is about 15 percent the rate in his municipality is less than 10 percent.  He said that contrary to the earlier statement by SSPE Flores Mier, police agents who fail tests will not be given second chances.

Nationwide Mexican state SSPs are under increasing pressure by the new security strategy implemented by newly inaugurated President Enrique Pena to get local and state police agents certified by November.  In January the Mexican national Secretaria de Gobernacion (SEGOB), or interior minister Miguel Osorio Chong, who is Pena's plenipotentiary in his new security plans has told SSPs nationwide that every police agent will be certified by November or will out of work.

Meanwhile in Durango, the capital of Durango state an unidentified judge has delayed until March 23rd whether to continue detaining the 64 local police agents from Ciudad Lerdo and Gomez Palacio, according to a separate report posted on the website of El Siglo de Durango.

Seven weeks ago 159 local police agents were disarmed by the Mexican Army and detained, 64 of which were placed in preventative detention colloquially known as rooting.  Past news reports do not make clear the length of the detention,.  Typically, rooting requests are for 30 days or more.

Rooting is a legal tool used by Mexican prosecutors to place suspects in detention without charge or trial until an investigation is complete.

It is most commonly used with drug trafficking suspects but it has also been used against errant state government officials.  The maneuver is meant to keep otherwise dangerous suspects from escaping until trial.  Rooting also known as arraigo has been severely criticized in the past, but it is also a legal tool that can only be used with permission of a judge.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Durango governor sacks Durango's top cop

Jesus Rosso Holguin
By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

Less than 24 hours after five Gomez Palacio, Durango transit police agents were gunned down in the La Laguna region, Durango's Secretaria de Seguridad Publica Estatal (SSPE) has stepped down, according to Mexican news accounts.

Jesus Antonio Rosso Holguin was "relieved" as a news report in El Siglo de Durango  news daily reported the news Saturday morning.  According to the translation, the news was released by Durango's Fiscalia General del Estado (FGE)or attorney general office. Rosso Holguin's  replacement was named Roberto Flores Mier, who was sworn in Friday.

Roberto Flores Mier, who is a veterinarian by trade has served with the Durango FGE and SSPE for 19 years.

The departure of Rosso Holguin was reportedly part of a minor shakeup pf the cabinet of Durango governor Jorge Herrera Caldera.  A second folio was changed as well:  Juan Francisco Gutierrez Fragoso of Durango's Secretaria de Desarrollo Economico was replaced by Ricardo Ociel Navarrete Gomez, who had held a private foundation job in the state.

State cabinet shakeups are not unusual in Mexican local politics.  Indeed, as Governor Herrera Caldera enters the third year of his six year term, so some changes are expected.  Changes in Mexican state top security postings are rare, however.

For example, Durango's current FGE, Sonia Yadira de la Garza Fragoso took the attorney general's spot before the second year of her predecessor, Ramiro Ortiz Aguirre, was complete.  Ramiro Ortiz Aguirre was murdered almost a year ago a few hours after FGE  Garza Fragoso pulled Ortiz's security detail.  Ortiz presided over the nearly year long discovery of mass graves in Durango state which eventually totalled 331 dead.

Another example would be the resignation of Brigadier General Ubaldo Ayala Tinoco, the SSPE of Tamaulipas, who left his post two years ago just as the mass graves in San Fernando were coming to light.  Those graves totalled 193 dead.

Rosso Holguin leaves in his wake a weakened but only recently revived security program in La Laguna and the oncoming pressure imposed by the newly elected federal government of the requirement that all police working in Mexico will be certified or will lose their jobs by November, 2013.  Many state and local police corporations have already begun the tests and transition to the new requirement, including Durango state.

The far eastern Durango municipality of Gomez Palacio lost almost 160 police agents earlier this month because of an internal investigation, and because those police agents refused to take part in training offered to them, according to Mexican press accounts.

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Mexican Army continues counternarcotics operations in Durango Sierras

By Chris Covert
Rantburg.com

Mexican Army units with the 10th Military Zone have been conducting counternarcotics operations in remote mountain Durango municipalities since at least February 1st, according to Mexican news accounts.

According to a news account which appeared on the website of El Siglo de Torreon news daily, Wednesday soldiers detained four unidentified suspects who were observed wearing military uniforms.  Reports are unclear where in Durango the detentions took place

Separate operations in San Dimas and Tamazula municipalities seized quantities of weapons.  The contraband were seized in the village of La Lajita in Tamazula and the village of Tayoltita in San Dimas.

Weapons seized included two AK-47 rifles, three 5.7mm pistols, two 9 mm pistols, one 40mm grenade launching attachment, one 40 mm grenade, 333 rounds of ammunition and 14 weapons magazines.

A vehicle was also seized.

According to a news article which appeared on the website of El Siglo de Durango news daily last week, last February 16th an army unit seized quantities of weapons and cash in an undisclosed location in Durango states, detaining three unidentified suspects.

Among the contraband seized were three rifles, four weapons magazines, 64 rounds of ammunition, one rifle scope and one vehicle.  The total amount if cash seized is MX $30,720 (USD$ 2409.96).

Chris Covert writes Mexican Drug War and national political news for Rantburg.com